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Westwood wins at Dundonald to seal Open place

Westwood wins at Dundonald to seal Open place

BBC Newsa day ago
Lee Westwood booked his return to The Open after a three-year absence by winning his qualifier at Dundonald Links.The 52-year-old posted scores of 70 and 67 for a seven under par total in blustery Ayrshire.Across four different courses, Westwood was one of eight Englishmen to claim the 20 spots available at Royal Portrush from 17-20 July."I've always said it's the greatest championship in golf," said Westwood, who finished in a tie for fourth at Portrush in 2019 and was runner-up at St Andrews in 2010."As a British player, you get phenomenal support and I really enjoyed Portrush last time."I won't really have any expectations. I'm playing at Valderrama next week in LIV and I'll try and sharpen my game up."I think of any major championship, you can compete on links courses as a senior. Tom Watson proved that around Turnberry in 2009 and then Greg Norman a couple of years later at Birkdale. You have to use a bit of cunning and guile with the wind."Westwood, a former world number one, will be playing in his 28th Open and 93rd major, while Scottish duo Daniel Young and Connor Graham will be making their debuts after finishing in the top five at Dundonald.Blairgowrie amateur Graham had to come through a play-off with compatriot Paul O'Hara.Young, from Perth, said: "It's a big, big step in my career."It's a tricky enough course and they set up a few tough pins, so you've just got to be pretty patient like I was this morning when I didn't probably have my best stuff. And then I strung together a lovely round this afternoon."
Poulter & son miss out in Kent
Westwood's former Ryder Cup partner Ian Poulter came up short in his qualifying bid, while his son Luke was also in the field at Royal Cinque Ports.Both men finished in a tie for 13th on one under par after Poulter junior had been leading at halfway with a round of 67.Another Ryder Cup veteran and LIV player, Graeme McDowell, finished on the same mark, missing out on the chance to play a second Open at his hometown course.English trio Nathan Kimsey, Curtis Knipes and Sebastian Cave were among the top five finishers in Kent.Three more Englishmen; Harry Hall, Frazer Jones and and OJ Farrell, came through at Burnham & Berrow, while George Bloor did the same at West Lancashire, finishing third on six under par.
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Wimbledon 2025: Raducanu sails past Vondrousova, Fritz in action, Osaka through, Paolini out
Wimbledon 2025: Raducanu sails past Vondrousova, Fritz in action, Osaka through, Paolini out

The Guardian

time8 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Wimbledon 2025: Raducanu sails past Vondrousova, Fritz in action, Osaka through, Paolini out

Update: Date: 2025-07-02T19:53:13.000Z Title: British wildcard Arthur Fery Content: Updates as we move into the second round at SW19 Rampant Brits' best performance since 1976 | Mail Bryan Bryan Armen Graham (now), Katy Murrells and Will Unwin (earlier) Wed 2 Jul 2025 21.53 CEST First published on Wed 2 Jul 2025 11.19 CEST 9.53pm CEST 21:53 , who was born in France but educated at nearby King's College Wimbledon and then at Stanford, faces an uphill battle after falling behind 6-4, 6-3 against Italy's Luciano Dardieri. But that battle will extend another day as their second-round title on No 2 Court has also been suspended for darkness. 9.49pm CEST 21:49 Fritz has run away with the third-set tiebreaker over Diallo over on No 1 Court, rattling off seven unanswered points for a 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(0) lead. The match has been suspended to the retractable roof. No such luck for Auger-Aliassime and Struff, whose match on Court 18 has been called for darkness only moments after the German leveled it at one set apiece by pulling out the second-set breaker, 11-9. 9.43pm CEST 21:43 Bellucci breaks Lehecka with a gorgeous forehand passing winner, then closes out the 7-6(4), 6-1, 7-5 victory with a tidy love hold. That ensures one of Harry Fonseca, Bellucci or Norrie will reach the last eight. Elsewhere on the outer courts, the No 31 seed Ashlyn Krueger from the United States has been eliminated in straight sets by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. That's two more seeds out. Only five more singles matches still happening around the grounds. Updated at 9.45pm CEST 9.33pm CEST 21:33 Mattia Bellucci was on the cusp of knocking out yet another seed in No 23 Jiri Lehecka. But the 23-year-old Czech was unable to serve out the match and was broken in a marathon game spanning 12 points and more than 10 minutes. They're back on level terms in the third set, but the Italian is still in firm control with a 7-6(4), 6-1, 5-5 lead. 9.19pm CEST 21:19 A couple more results from the outer courts are trickling through. No 14 seed Elina Svitolina has seen off the Belarusian qualifier Aliaksandra Sasnovich in straight sets. Poland's Kamil Majchrzak has brushed aside Ethan Quinn of the United States, also in straights. And the Aussie Jordan Thompson has fought back from a two-sets-to-one deficit to oust Benjamin Bonzi in five. 9.14pm CEST 21:14 Turns out the carnage at the top of the women's draw is historic. This marks only the second major tournament in the Open era (since 1968) where four of the top five women's seeds failed to make it past the second round. The first was Wimbledon 2018. 9.09pm CEST 21:09 Fritz could be in for another long night on No 1 Court. He's breezed through the second set in 25 minutes to square things with Diallo at one set apiece. The American won 92% of the points on his first serve in the second frame, up from 69% in the opener. 9.00pm CEST 21:00 Another top player crashes out as fourth-seeded Jasmine Paolini bows 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 to world No 87 Kamilla Rakhimova. It's the biggest win of the 23-year-old Russian's career and it comes against last year's runner-up. Paolini's departure makes it 28 seeds to have gone out of the tournament in less than four completed days – 14 apiece on the men's and women's sides – including the No 2, No 3, No 4 and No 5 women's seeds. Updated at 9.28pm CEST 8.56pm CEST 20:56 'I knew today I had to be aggressive because Marketa would beat me if I pushed the ball around,' Raducanu says. 'The atmosphere was electric and I'm just so happy to get to play another match here.' Asked about her Friday date with Sabalenka, the British No 1 is to the point: 'Of course she's No 1 in the world right now, so dominant on the tour, has won literally everything. It's going to be a very difficult match. All I can do is control my side of the court as much as possible. I guess there's no pressure on me in the next round at all.' 8.50pm CEST 20:50 Raducanu closes it out like she's got a taxi waiting. She breaks Vondrousova to close out a 6-3, 6-3 win over the 2023 Wimbledon champion in 82 minutes. It's as well as we've seen her play in some time and her reward for her trouble will be a third-round date with top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka. Updated at 9.16pm CEST 8.44pm CEST 20:44 Upset watch on No 3 Court. Jasmine Paolini, the No 4 seed from Italy, is down a break in the decider against Kamilla Rakhimova. The Russian is serving at 4-6, 6-4, 4-3, threatening another blow at a women's singles draw that's already in tatters. 8.41pm CEST 20:41 Center Court is buzzing as Raducanu is within touching distance of the third round after backing up a break for a 6-3, 4-2 lead over Vondrousova. Brilliant stuff from the 2021 US Open champion, who is all over the court and striking the ball brilliantly. Updated at 9.17pm CEST 8.35pm CEST 20:35 More good news for Canada. Felix Auger-Aliassime, the No 25 seed and a quarter-finalist here four years ago, has taken the opening set from Germany's Jan-Lennard Struff on Court 18. 8.32pm CEST 20:32 Gabriel Diallo has taken the opening set from Taylor Fritz on No 1 Court. The 23-year-old Montrealer got the better of his opponent in a 16-shot rally, the longest of the match so far, to break for 5-4. From there he showed no nerve in coolly serving it out, closing the frame with a 115mph ace out wide. Updated at 8.34pm CEST 8.22pm CEST 20:22 We've got a marathon unfolding with the shadows lengthening on Court 15, where Australian's Justin Thompson has dragged Medvedev-slayer Benjamin Bonzi into a fifth set in a match that just entered its fourth hour. 8.16pm CEST 20:16 A rocky start for No 5 seed Taylor Fritz on No 1 Court. He was broken in his opening service game and finds himself in a 0-3 hole against Gabriel Diallo, the in-form 23-year-old from Montreal who is fresh off his first tour-level title at 's-Hertogenbosch. Elsewhere, fourth-seeded Jasmine Paolini is headed to a decider with Kamilla Rakhimova after dropping the second set on No 3 Court. Updated at 8.19pm CEST 8.07pm CEST 20:07 Raducanu takes the first set, 6-3. After breaking Vondrousova in a marathon eighth game for a 5-3 advantage, the British No 1 served her way to triple set point. She frittered two of them away before Vondrousova overcooked a forehand, sending the Centre Court crowd into roars. Updated at 8.27pm CEST 8.01pm CEST 20:01 Naomi Osaka has reached the third round at Wimbledon for the first time in seven years after finishing off a 6-3, 6-2 win over Katerina Siniakova. She will face the winner of tonight's match between Ashlyn Krueger and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova for her first ever place in the Wimbledon round of 16. Updated at 8.06pm CEST 7.57pm CEST 19:57 Emma Raducanu appeared to have drawn first blood on Centre Court, passing Marketa Vondrousova with a dazzling backhand winner for 4-2, only to quickly go triple break point down in the ensuing game. Raducanu saved two of them but a biffed forehand from the baseline gifted the break back to Vondrousova, who will serve at 3-4 after the change of ends. Updated at 8.19pm CEST 7.46pm CEST 19:46 It got late early for the No 12 seed Diana Shnaider over on Court 18. She dropped 10 of the final 11 games in a 6-4, 6-1 defeat to the French qualifier Diane Parry, who progresses to face the British 23-year-old Sonay Kartal next. 7.42pm CEST 19:42 Solana Sierra backed into the main draw after losing in the third round of last week's qualifying tournament. It's been a much longer time in London than expected, which has forced her to change her apartment three times. Today's win means she and her mother will be moving house a fourth time. 'Like we said, it's a good problem,' she says. 7.39pm CEST 19:39 Katie Boulter is out in the second round at Wimbledon for the second straight year. Last year it was Harriet Dart who did the honours. This time it's Solana Sierra, the 21-year-old lucky loser from Argentina who has won 6-7(7), 6-2, 6-1 for her first career win over an opponent in the top 50. 'It feels amazing,' Sierra says. 'I knew it was a tough match. Katie is an amazing player, so I tried to focus on myself and enjoy the moment because it's a dream to play at Wimbledon and on this court and in front of this crowd.' It was a day to forget for the 28-year-old from Leicestershire, whose 36 unforced errors included 14 double faults. Updated at 7.41pm CEST 7.31pm CEST 19:31 Amanda Anisimova is through to round three after a straightforward 6-4, 6-3 win over Mexico's Renata Zarazua. The No 13 seed from the United States advances to face Hungary's Dalma Galfi, the world No 110 who upset Beatriz Haddad Maia earlier today. 7.26pm CEST 19:26 Emma Raducanu and Marketa Vondrousova have taken Centre Court for their peach of a teatime fixture between former grand slam champions. The Briton impressed in her first-round win over Mimi Xu, showcasing a more aggressive forehand, the product of recent technical tweaks under new coach Mark Petchey. That shot will be vital against the 2023 Wimbledon champion, a clever lefty who thrives on disrupting rhythm with spin and court craft. Updated at 7.32pm CEST 7.22pm CEST 19:22 Also in trouble is the No 12 seed Diana Shnaider. She is being given a run for her money on Court 18 by the French qualifier Diane Parry, who has won four straight games from a break down to take the first set, 6-4. Elsewhere, the No 24 seed Elise Mertens has finished off Philadelphia's Ann Li, fighting back to win 6-7(5), 6-1, 6-2 and book a place in the third round. She will face the winner of today's match between Aliaksandra Sasnovic and the 14th-seeded Elina Svitolina. 7.15pm CEST 19:15 More trouble for Katie Boulter, who is broken at love to open the third set. Sierra, the world No 101 making her main-draw debut here, quickly backs up the break for a 6-7(7), 6-2, 2-0 edge. Updated at 7.43pm CEST 7.12pm CEST 19:12 Thanks, Will. The British hope Katie Boulter is into a decider with the Argentinian lucky loser Solana Sierra on No 1 Court after dropping the second set, 6-2. Boulter won just 8% of her points behind her second serve in that set and her negative body language has prompted some spirited words of encouragement from her coach. 6.59pm CEST 18:59 On that note, I am going to head off and Bryan Armen Graham will be taking over for the remainder of this blog. 6.58pm CEST 18:58 Alcaraz embraces Tarvet warmly at the net and offers a few kind words and some obvious respect. Updated at 7.44pm CEST 6.57pm CEST 18:57 Carlos Alcaraz has seen off Ollie Tarvet (6-1, 6-4, 6-4). It was anything but straightforward for the Spaniard who was made to work extremely hard by the British qualifier, allowing the loser on this occasion to leave with great pride and a growing reputation. 6.53pm CEST 18:53 Tarvet's service game begins with raucous noise from the stands. Tarvet, however, pings a backhand into the net as Alcaraz sense victory. Not to worry, he wins the next couple of points as the Spaniard struggles returning. Alcaraz will have to serve to win this match. 6.50pm CEST 18:50 This is not offence to Ollie Tarvet but what these opening two matches have shown for Alcaraz is that he is certainly not at his best. Others looking to challenge for the title will be less worried about him than when they arrived. Admittedly, he is one game away from being in the third round but is really having to work for it. 6.47pm CEST 18:47 And Boulter is broken, Sierra sending a rocketing forehand that is too fast for the Briton. This game could be going the distance at this rate. Updated at 6.52pm CEST 6.46pm CEST 18:46 Once again, being broken has irked Alcaraz. Bish, bash, bosh and the Spaniard has three Break Points. A ripping return to a second serve does the job. 4-3 to Alcaraz in the third, he serves next. 6.43pm CEST 18:43 TARVET BREAKS BACK! Tarvet earns himself two break points after Alcaraz's backhand volley at the net goes awry. Tarvet drops to his knees after Alcaraz loosely sends one long. 6.39pm CEST 18:39 It is not vintage stuff in Boulter v Sierra but the Briton is gritting it out. It looks plain sailing in her opening service game of the second set but she throws away a couple of set points, leading to Deuce. After a few false starts, she eventually fires and Sierra can't do much about it. 6.37pm CEST 18:37 Tarvet has great speed across the court and takes plenty of pleasure in chasing down an Alcaraz drop shot, sliding across the turf to do so, winning the point in the process. He offers up a hot dog on the next point but to no avail. The game eventually goes to Deuce where Alcaraz takes control and breaks with a whipped forehand. Updated at 6.44pm CEST 6.31pm CEST 18:31 It is going with serve on Centre in the third. Alcaraz finishes off his latest service game by pushing Tarvet out wide. The Briton manages to return but Alcaraz has little trouble finding the vacant space to make it 2-2 in the third. 6.30pm CEST 18:30 BOULTER WINS THE FIRST SET! Boulter and Sierra end up in a first set tie-break. Boutler rattles to an early 4-1 lead. Sierra manages to battle back and the tie-break reaches 6-6 as she maintains her composure in a lengthy rally. Boulter earns the chance to serve for the set but needlessly whacks a backhand into the net. Boulter and Sierra seem to be fighting themselves as much as one another. At the fourth time of asking, Boulter wins Set Point to get her up and running. Updated at 6.43pm CEST 6.23pm CEST 18:23 Tarvet will keep fighting to the bitter end, that's for sure. The opening point of Alcaraz's service game producing a lengthy rally, ended by a pummelling forehand from Tarvet at the baseline. From here on it, however, it is all Alcaraz, who does not give Tarvet anything to work with. 6.20pm CEST 18:20 Tarvet went for a little break and is back on court against Alcaraz. He opens the third – and probably – final set and battles his way to Deuce with a cracking serve down the middle as he saves two break points. It takes a bit of back and forth but eventually Tarvet completes the hold to earn a roar on Centre Court. Updated at 6.25pm CEST 6.20pm CEST 18:20 Nuno Borges knocks out Billy Harris. The Briton gave it everything in the third set tie-back but his opponent progresses (6-3, 6-4, 7-6). 6.12pm CEST 18:12 After all that hard work, Boulter opens with a double fault. Boulter does, however, recover from this mishap and takes the game after Sierra miscues a return. The scores are level at 5-5! 6.08pm CEST 18:08 Billy Harris battles to extend the match against Borges, taking the third set to a tie-break. Updated at 6.17pm CEST 6.07pm CEST 18:07 BOULTER BREAKS! Sierra leads 5-4 but Boulter takes things back on serve. 6.07pm CEST 18:07 Alcaraz wins the second set 6-4 against Tarvet. 6.04pm CEST 18:04 Boulter produces some big serves which Sierra cannot return as she manages to hold and stay in the opening set. Sierra, however, has the chance to serve it out. 6.03pm CEST 18:03 You can tell how hard Alcaraz is finding things because he is really celebrating every point won. The Spaniard wins the first few points of Tarvet's service game, leaving the Briton irked by his own profligacy. Alcaraz breaks and has the chance to serve for the second set. 5.59pm CEST 17:59 A double fault from Boulter gifts Sierra a second break of the opening set. Boulter needs to improve her serving quickly to avoid a dismal afternoon. Updated at 6.02pm CEST 5.56pm CEST 17:56 A stunning rally finishes with a stupendous Tarvet forehand from the baseline which has too much pace and power for Alcaraz, who sticks out a forlorn racket. He eventually beats the hold by racing to reach a drop shot and just getting it back over, leaving Alcaraz with little chance to return. 5.51pm CEST 17:51 Tarvet is certainly not being outclassed, producing some fine tennis that any of the top 20 would be proud of and is certainly making Alcaraz work. Tarvet has an impressively mentality where he fights for every point to the end, unperturbed by who his opponent is. Admittedly, it is not enough on this occasion as Alcaraz holds to make it 3-3 in the second. 5.49pm CEST 17:49 Naturally, Sierra breaks straight back against Boulter and then holds to take a 2-1 lead in the opening set. 5.46pm CEST 17:46 Tarvet does hold! Tarvet is doing his bet to work Alcaraz around the court but it is an unenforced error as the Spaniard sends a drop shot into the net. Updated at 5.51pm CEST 5.45pm CEST 17:45 A fine day for Cameron Norrie. 5.43pm CEST 17:43 After a couple of breaks in a row, Alcaraz holds. There is a moment of amusement after Tarvet top edges a shot into the crowd and a fan does not want to give it back until a sheepish steward shows up. Can Tarvet hold? 5.41pm CEST 17:41 Things start very well for Boulter as she breaks Sierra in the first game of the match on Court One. That should be a useful confidence booster. 5.39pm CEST 17:39 Katie Boulter is underway in her clash with Solana Sierra. One to keep an eye. Updated at 5.49pm CEST

Wimbledon: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is the last top-five women's seed left. Carlos Alcaraz wins
Wimbledon: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is the last top-five women's seed left. Carlos Alcaraz wins

The Independent

time9 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Wimbledon: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is the last top-five women's seed left. Carlos Alcaraz wins

Aryna Sabalenka joked that she'd love it if the upsets at Wimbledon would stop, which makes sense, given that she is ranked No. 1. She's also the only one of the five top-seeded women still in the bracket after No. 4 Jasmine Paolini, last year's runner-up, followed No. 2 Coco Gauff, No. 3 Jessica Pegula and No. 5 Zheng Qinwen on the way out. Sabalenka was two points from dropping the opening set of her second-round match three times on Wednesday before asserting herself for a 7-6 (4), 6-4 victory over Marie Bouzkova. In all, a record-tying 23 seeded players — 10 women, 13 men — were gone by the end of Day 2, equaling the most at any Grand Slam event in the past 25 years. Five more women joined them by losing Wednesday: Paolini, No. 12 Diana Shnaider, No. 21 Beatriz Haddad Maia, No. 22 Donna Vekic and No. 29 Leylah Fernandez. 'Of course you're going to know the overall picture,' Sabalenka said, then added with a chuckle: "I hope it's no upsets anymore in this tournament, if you know what I mean.' She is a three-time Grand Slam champion, with all of those titles coming on hard courts at the Australian Open or U.S. Open. She also was the runner-up to Gauff at the clay-court French Open last month — drawing criticism from some over her post-match comments, a flap she and Gauff set aside via social media videos last week — but hasn't been past the semifinals on the grass of the All England Club. A year ago, Sabalenka was forced to miss Wimbledon because of an injured shoulder. On Wednesday, the record-breaking heat of the first two days gave way to rain that delayed the start of play on smaller courts for about two hours, along with temperatures that dropped from above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius) to below 68 F (20 C). At Centre Court, the 48th-ranked Bouzkova went ahead 6-5 in the first set with the match's initial service break thanks to a double-fault by Sabalenka. Bouzkova served for that set, and was two points away from it at 30-15 in that game, again at 30-all, then once more at deuce. But on the last such occasion, Sabalenka came through with a forehand volley winner she punctuated with a yell, followed by a down-the-line backhand winner that was accompanied by another shout. 'That was a tough moment," said Sabalenka, who will face 2021 U.S. Open champion Emma Raducanu next. 'Until that point, (my) return wasn't great enough to break her serve. I'm really glad ... everything clicked together and I was able to break her back. I kind of like felt a little bit better.' That sent them to a tiebreaker, and from 4-all there, Sabalenka took the next three points, ending the set with a powerful forehand return winner off a 67 mph second serve. In the second set, the only break arrived for a 3-2 lead for Sabalenka, and that was basically that. Sabalenka compiled a 41-17 edge in winners while making only 18 unforced errors in a match that lasted a little more than 1 1/2 hours. What else happened Wednesday at Wimbledon? Raducanu defeated 2023 Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova 6-3, 6-3, and Australian Open champion Madison Keys, who is seeded sixth, beat Olga Danilovic 6-4, 6-2. In men's action, two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz extended his winning streak to 20 matches with a 6-1, 6-4, 6-4 victory over 733rd-ranked qualifier Ollie Tarvet, who plays for the University of San Diego. But No. 12 Frances Tiafoe joined the parade of seeds exiting, eliminated by 2022 Wimbledon semifinalist Cam Norrie 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-5. Who plays Thursday at the All England Club? Novak Djokovic, who has won seven of his 24 major championships at Wimbledon, will lead off the Centre Court schedule on Day 4 against Britain's Dan Evans at 1:30 p.m. local time (8:30 a.m. ET), followed by Iga Swiatek vs. Caty McNally, and No. 1 Jannik Sinner vs. Aleksandar Vukic. ___

Oliver Tarvet toasts the ‘most special day' after impressing Carlos Alcaraz
Oliver Tarvet toasts the ‘most special day' after impressing Carlos Alcaraz

The Independent

time9 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Oliver Tarvet toasts the ‘most special day' after impressing Carlos Alcaraz

Oliver Tarvet admitted facing Carlos Alcaraz at Wimbledon was the 'most special day of my life'. Tarvet, ranked 733 in the world, completed a remarkable journey from total unknown to taking on the defending champion on Centre Court. It might have seemed like some kind of fever dream to most of us, but the 21-year-old mixed it with the five-time grand slam winner before succumbing to a 6-1 6-4 6-4 defeat. 'It's not every day that you get to play against maybe the best player in the world,' said the right-hander from St Albans. 'So yeah, it was really important for me going into the match to enjoy it, enjoy the opportunity. 'I think I did a pretty good job of kind of enjoying the moment and trying to also play some good tennis at the same time. 'I kind of knew that the first set might be difficult because it's not a stage that I'm used to. 'Even though the first set scoreline was 6-1, I still had break points in three games. I definitely had chances. I think that should give me confidence that I was competing. ' Credit to him, he plays the big points just incredibly well. That's the difference. You kind of feel like you're in the set, you lose it 6-1, it's tough. 'But yeah, even though it was not the result that I wanted today, it was definitely the most special day of my life.' Tarvet will not see much of the £99,000 he has earned for coming through qualifying and reaching the second round as he is still a US college student playing under national association rules. But he certainly gave Alcaraz a run for his money, breaking the two-time Wimbledon champion's serve twice. Alcaraz, now on a 20-match winning streak after his title successes in Rome, at the French Open and at Queen's Club, was full of praise for his opponent. 'I told him just congratulations for the run, keep it going, keep working hard,' he said. 'It seems like he's a really nice guy and a really nice, hard worker. It seems like he loves tennis. He played with such a good passion out there, that is really important. 'How far he can go, I don't know. If he chooses to stay in college, the level that we can see in college is pretty high. 'Let's see, if he keeps working hard, if he keeps practising hard and playing in a professional level, I think he can go far.' Elsewhere in SW19, teenage sensation Joao Fonseca brought hundreds of rowdy Brazilian fans to Court 12 and delighted them all by beating American Jenson Brooksby 6-4 5-7 6-2 6-4 to set up an all-South American clash with Chile's Nicolas Jarry. Russian 14th seed Andrey Rublev dropped the opening set against South African Lloyd Harris, but hit back to win in four and will face Adrian Mannarino of France in round three.

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